Table of Contents
- DATAMONITOR VIEW
- ANALYSIS
- The majority of wealth managers are not concerned about the risk of a
global economic downturn
- There are two broad schools of thought on the economic outlook for the
next two years
- Very few wealth managers acknowledge that a market downturn is on the
way
- Datamonitor believes that 2008-09 will be characterized by struggling
economies worldwide
- Rising interest rates, excessive borrowing and negative savings rates
have combined in a perfect storm that will shake most of the world' s
economies
- The widespread securitization of loans will compound this problem
- Consumers were not alone in overextending themselves; state debt
servicing is up against budget, while tax revenues are sharply down, which
may signal a muni bond crisis ahead
- The US economy is not healthy enough to ' expand' itself out of these
conditions
- Foreign direct investment may also boost the economy; unfortunately
foreign investors have run for the hills
- A continued Treasury sell-off may further depress the dollar and, at
worst, force interest rate hikes
- Another major terrorist attack in the US will destabilize the economy
further
- Market capitalization, to varying degrees, will fall worldwide as US
stock markets continue their jitters
- Communication, risk assessment and effectively marketed products will be
the keys to success in the downturn
- A structured communication program should have already been
implemented to address customer concerns about market volatility
- Risk assessment is more important now than ever
- The potential to deepen share of wallet is significant
- Risk-averse clients will demand insulation and reassurance from the
downturn
- Clients will be tempted to hold investments in cash
- Risk-loving clients should be encouraged to see the opportunities in
volatility and in mis-matches
- Product development will be a combination of new launches, and
intelligently marketed existing products
- The lending side of the business will also be important as
re-mortgaging opportunities will abound when rates come down
- Wealth managers who don' t anticipate client needs in the market recovery
will lose them
- A shift back into stock market-related investments should be
marketing-led, not client-led
- As the market improves, clients will again want more say in their
investments
- The best client managers will be poached from those wealth managers
without a retention plan already in place when the market improves
- APPENDIX
- Definitions
- Currency peg
- Exchange-traded fund (ETF)
- Guaranteed fund/ Capital-protected fund
- Risk tolerance
- Uncorrelated investment
- Methodology
- Further reading
- Ask the analyst
- Datamonitor consulting
- Disclaimer
- List of Figures
- Figure 1: US troubles have spread to the rest of the world
- Figure 2: Less than 10% of wealth managers were most concerned about a
potential recession as of September 2007
- Figure 3: General obligation and revenue muni yields have increased in
recent weeks, while Treasury yields have decreased, indicating a shift
from munis to Treasuries
- Figure 4: The US has run a trade deficit since 2001
- Figure 5: US dollar exchange rates have fallen against the European
currencies since the last market downturn
- Figure 6: Net assets in guaranteed funds have grown strongly from
mid-2006
- Figure 7: Net sales into equity-linked UCITS have been negative in 2007
|
Related Report
|